Fricot is a traditional Acadian dish. The word fricot has its origins in 18th century France where it was used to mean a feast. The following century, it had evolved to mean "meat stew", and later still it became used to refer to prepared food.
The main ingredients consist of potatoes, onions, and whatever meat was available, cooked in a stew and topped with dumplings. The common meats used were chicken (fricot au poulet), clams (fricot aux coques), rabbit (fricot au lapin des bois), beef, or pork. When chicken was used, it was traditionally an older chicken, since an egg-laying chicken would have been too precious to cook. This accounts for the long cooking time, as an older chicken would have had tougher meat.
In lean times, a meatless fricot would be made. Fricot a la belette was one term for this, which means "weasel stew". The reference being made is that the cook is as sly as a weasel for leaving out the meat. In the opposite vein, Prince Edward Island Acadians use the term fricot a la bazette which means "stupid cook's stew", implying that the meat was forgotten.
And when midnight comes around.
You touch me baby, show me baby
You touch me baby, show me baby
You touch me baby, show me baby*
Because I heard you said
We were going nowhere,
That you were cutting me loose,
Were gonna cut off the juice,
Because I know you're just afraid
I'll make you open your heart,
It don't mean a thing,
You can call it experience,
'Cause when midnight comes
I'm gonna show you who I am,
I'll knock the stars from your eyes,
I'm gonna make you realize